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Habitat establishment, captive breeding and conservation translocation to save threatened populations of the Vulnerable European mudminnow Umbra krameri

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 November 2016

Sándor Tatár
Affiliation:
Tavirózsa Association, Veresegyház, Hungary
Bálint Bajomi*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Sciences, Centre for Environmental Sciences, Eötvös Loránd University, Pázmány Péter sétány 1/A, H-1117 Budapest, Hungary.
András Specziár
Affiliation:
Balaton Limnological Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Centre for Ecological Research, Tihany, Hungary
Balázs Tóth
Affiliation:
Danube-Ipoly National Park Directorate, Budapest, Hungary
Magdolna Müllerné Trenovszki
Affiliation:
Department of Aquaculture, Szent István University, Gödöllő, Hungary
Béla Urbányi
Affiliation:
Department of Aquaculture, Szent István University, Gödöllő, Hungary
Béla Csányi
Affiliation:
Danube Research Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Centre for Ecological Research, Budapest, Hungary
József Szekeres
Affiliation:
Danube Research Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Centre for Ecological Research, Budapest, Hungary
Tamás Müller
Affiliation:
Department of Aquaculture, Szent István University, Gödöllő, Hungary
*
(Corresponding author) E-mail bb@bajomibalint.hu
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Abstract

In Europe 37% of freshwater fish are threatened. However, conservation activity is less widespread for fish compared to other vertebrate groups. The Vulnerable European mudminnow Umbra krameri is a marshland fish endemic to the Carpathian Basin. Its range and population have declined significantly since the 1990s. The main threats to the species are habitat loss and the invasive Chinese sleeper Perccottus glenii. During 2008–2012 a species conservation programme was established to rescue broodstocks from threatened populations, breed them under controlled conditions, translocate both rescued fish and their laboratory-reared offspring to surrogate habitats, and finally reintroduce offspring to their original habitats. Broodstocks from three threatened habitats were bred in the laboratory and produced offspring appropriate for stocking. Six artificial ponds were created in the pilot study area according to the environmental needs of the species, four of which proved to be suitable surrogate habitats in which translocated fish survived and reproduced successfully. Populations in the original habitats were supplemented with fish from laboratory breeding and from the natural recruitment of surrogate habitats, with special care of the corresponding broodstocks. Future challenges include improving our knowledge about the ecological processes in which the European mudminnow participates, identifying the most threatened populations, habitats suitable for restoration and potential areas for creation of surrogate habitats, and enhancing induced propagation methodology.

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Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2016 
Figure 0

Fig. 1 (a) Sites of surveyed European mudminnow Umbra krameri populations and habitats (Table 1 and Table S2) in Hungary, with numbers of caught individuals and stocked captive-bred individuals. White circles represent extinct populations. The inset shows the numbers of fish caught for propagation and stocked offspring in Illés Ponds I, III, IV, VI of Szada Pilot Area (Table 3). (b) Location of natural and artificial ponds (Pócos and Illés Ponds, respectively) in Szada Pilot Area. *Parent fish were captured in Pócos Pond B (site 9; 6 individuals) and Illés Pond IV (13 individuals). The latter habitat is connected to Pócos Pond B.

Figure 1

Table 1 Fish assemblages and macrophyte coverage recorded during surveys at sites of existing or previously known populations of European mudminnow Umbra krameri in Hungary's Carpathian Basin (Fig. 1), with site number and survey date in parentheses.

Figure 2

Table 2 Outcome for European mudminnow saved from three sites (Fig. 1), bred in the laboratory and released at three artificial ponds, with capture site, number of individuals captured, mortality during the acclimatization period, number of individuals bred in the laboratory, post-breeding mortality, number of sexually mature individuals released after laboratory breeding, and release date and location. More than half of mortalities were attributable to poor condition, age or disease.

Figure 3

Table 3 Details of releases of European mudminnow offspring of captive bred and nursed stocks.

Figure 4

Table 4 Results of monitoring in Illés Ponds (Fig. 1), with numbers of European mudminnow, crucian carp and weatherfish, mean recapture rate (no. recaptured relative to no. stocked) and mean coverage of macrophytes. As Illés Pond IV is connected to Pócos Pond B to provide a refugee for natural marsh fish assemblages in dry periods, recapture rate is not relevant. In some cases low water temperature probably decreased the sampling efficiency.

Supplementary material: PDF

Tatár supplementary material

Tables S1-S5

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